The host of the network’s “On the Record” since 2002 will be replaced by Brit Hume, Fox announced Tuesday.

“Yes, I have left the Fox News Channel,” Van Susteren wrote on Facebook Tuesday. “On Thursday night, I made my decision and informed Fox News of my decision that I was leaving Fox News Channel per my contract. Fox has not felt like home to me for a few years and I took advantage of the clause in my contract which allows me to leave now.”

She said the clause “had a time limitation, meaning I could not wait,” she wrote. “I love my staff, I love my colleagues, and I love the crews. That is the hardest part of this decision as they are wonderful people. And most of all? I love the viewers — even the ones who have gotten mad at me over the years and taken swipes.”

C’mon. Who would “swipe” at anyone on Fox News?

The broadcaster’s departure comes the same day Fox’s parent company, Twenty-First Century Fox, announced it was paying former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson $20 million to settle her sex harassment suit against former Fox News boss Roger Ailes.

Coincidence? Hmm.

In a statement, the network said Van Susteren’s decision “had nothing to do with the settlement today,” according to USA Today.

A source told the newspaper Van Susteren’s decision was about a financial disagreement.

Fox hired Van Susteren in 2002 after spent more than a decade at CNN, where she earned fame as a legal analyst of the O.J. Simpson trial. She later co-hosted “Burden of Proof” with Roger Cossack and her own show “The Point.”

Van Susteren said on Facebook “I hope to continue my career in broadcasting.” In July, she reportedly told the Daily Beast if she ever left broadcasting, she might explore re-entering the legal world, or teaching at Georgetown University, where she earned two law degrees.

Hume wrote on Twitter he was “sorry to see Greta go. I count her as a friend … I hope I won’t drive her audience off.”

More in Television

The White House's move to restore Acosta's pass, announced in a letter to the news network, appeared to be a capitulation to CNN in its brief legal fight against the administration. White House officials had suspended Acosta's White House press pass following a contentious news conference on Nov. 7, prompting CNN to sue last week to force the administration to...